Japan Securities Summit 2016 Tokyo as a Global Financial

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Japan Securities Summit 2016

Tokyo as a Global Financial Center

March 2016 Yusuke Kawamura Deputy Chairman of the Institute Daiwa Institute of Research Ltd. This handout is not intended as a solicitation for investment. Content herein is based on reliable information available at the time the handout was prepared and may be amended or otherwise changed in the future without notice. We make no representations as to accuracy or completeness. Daiwa Securities Group is the parent of Daiwa Institute of Research Holdings (parent of Daiwa Institute of Research) and Daiwa Securities. Daiwa Institute of Research retains all rights related to the content of this handout, which may not be redistributed or otherwise transmitted without prior consent.

Tokyo’s Ranking as a Global Financial Center

1

(rank)

Global Financial Centers—Changes in the rankings of five key cities

"The Global Financial Centres Index" - Industry Sector Sub-Indices Ranking

2 3 4 5

6

Rank

Investment Management

Banking

Government & regulatory

Insurance

Professional services

1

London

London

London

New York

London

2

New York

New York

New York

London

New York

3

Hong Kong

Hong Kong

Hong Kong

Singapore

Singapore

4

Singapore

Singapore

Singapore

Busan

Hong Kong

5

Toronto

Tokyo

Tokyo

Hong Kong

Washington DC

6

Tokyo

Chicago

Seoul

Chicago

San Francisco

7

Chicago

Zurich

Chicago

Seoul

Chicago

8

San Francisco

Shanghai

Sydney

Washington DC

Boston

9

Boston

Seoul

Toronto

San Francisco

Tokyo

10

Zurich

San Francisco

Zurich

Tokyo

Zurich

Source: Z/Yen Group "The Global Financial Centres Index 18", September 2015

7

"Global Power City Index" - Function-Specific Ranking Rank

8

9 (15)

10 Mar-

Mar-

Mar-

Mar-

Mar-

Mar-

Mar-

Mar-

Mar-

2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 London Hong Kong Tokyo

New York Singapore

Source: Z/Yen Group "The Global Financial Centres Index"

Cultural Interaction

Economy

R&D

Livability

Environment

Accessibility

1

Tokyo

New York

London

Paris

Geneva

Paris

2

London

Tokyo

New York

Berlin

Frankfurt

London

3

New York

London

Paris

Vancouver

Stockholm

Amsterdam

4

Beijing

Los Angels

Singapore

Vienna

Zurich

Singapore

5

Hong Kong

Paris

Tokyo

Barcelona

Vienna

Hong Kong

6

Singapore

Seoul

Beijing

Geneva

Singapore

Frankfurt

7

Zurich

Boston

Berlin

Toronto

Vancouver

Shanghai New York

8

Seoul

Singapore

Sydney

Zurich

London

9

Shanghai

San Francisco

Vienna

Amsterdam

Berlin

Seoul

10

Stockholm

Chicago

Los Angels

Madrid

Copenhagen

Istanbul

11

Geneva

Hong Kong

Istanbul

Copenhagen

Amsterdam

Tokyo

12

Copenhagen

Osaka

Brussels

Milan

Washington, D.C.

Kuala Lumpur

13

Paris

Berlin

Barcelona

Stockholm

Tokyo

Brussels

14

Sydney

Sydney

Seoul

Frankfurt

Madrid

Barcelona

Amsterdam

Tokyo

Sydney

Milan

15

Washington, D.C. Washington, D.C.

Source: The Mori Memorial Foundation's Institute for Urban Strategies "Global Power City Index 2015"

Copyright © 2016 Daiwa Institute of Research Ltd. All rights reserved.

1

Equity Markets: Major Presence in Domestic Markets Foreign investor shareholding ratios by country

Value of Share Trading in Major Stock Exchanges (Domestic & Foreign) ($ trillion)

(%)

35

60

55.0

UK

NYSE Euronext (US)

30

50

Japan Exchange Group Shanghai SE

25

London SE Group

40

Hong Kong Exchanges

20

31.7

Japan

Singapore Exchange

30

15 20

16.2

10 10

5

US

0

0 1990

1993

1996

1999

2002

2005

2008

2011

Source: World Federation of Exchanges, London Stock Exchange Group

2014 (Year)

1997

1999

2001

2003

2005

2007

2009

2011

2013

(Year) Sources: Tokyo Stock Exchange (Japan), Federal Reserve Board (US), Office for National Statistics (UK) Note: Japanese ratio relates to listed companies; US and UK ratios include unlisted companies.

Copyright © 2016 Daiwa Institute of Research Ltd. All rights reserved.

2

Equity Markets: Steep Decline in Foreign Company Listings

(Companies)

Total corporate listings on TSE and foreign companies listed on TSE

(Companies)

140

4,000 127

Foreign company listing

120

3,500

Total company listing (right scale)

100

3,000

80 2,500 60

2,000

40

1,500

20

9

0

1,000 1980

1985

1990

1995

2000

Source: Tokyo Stock Exchange Note: Osaka Stock Exchange included as of 2013. Copyright © 2016 Daiwa Institute of Research Ltd. All rights reserved.

2005

2010

2015 (Year-end)

3

Bond Markets: Problems with Diversification Debt securities outstanding by sector of issuer (as of end-June 2015, in billions of US dollars) Japan (total 10,985)

United States (total 36,278)

2,143 (19%)

14,976

15,694

615

(42%)

(43%)

(6%) 8,227 (75%)

5,389 (15%)

Financial corporations

Non-financial corporations

China (total 6,776)

1,980

2,720

(29%)

(40%)

2,075 (31%)

General government

United Kingdom (total 6,263)

2,725 2,964

(44%)

(47%)

571 (9%)

Source: Bank for International Settlements

Copyright © 2016 Daiwa Institute of Research Ltd. All rights reserved.

4

Comparison between Tokyo, New York, London, Hong Kong and Singapore as Global Financial Centers ① Tokyo • Corporation tax: 23.9% • Individual income tax: Tax system 45.95% (top rate) • VAT: 8% (consumption tax)

New York • Corporate tax: 39% (top rate) • Individual income tax: 39.6%(top rate) • VAT: 8.875%

London • Corporate tax: 20% • Individual income tax: 45%(top rate) • VAT: 20%

Hong Kong • Corporation tax: 16.5% • Individual income tax: 17% (top rate) • VAT: 0%

• Development of the • Deregulation of the • Offshore RMB business • The aim of plans to financial market in light financial market as a promotion in light of establish Tokyo as a global of economic growth & result of The Big bang internationalization of financial center is to make status of USD mother in the 1980s. RMB. Securing position market (Abolishment Approach to fund raising easier for both as world’s biggest • Deregulation of the of restriction on establishme domestic and overseas offshore RMB market. investors and companies. financial sector and non-member nt as global connection of finance investment in stock • Company start-ups: financial • Company start-ups: Oneusing IT exchange members) Internet-based one-stop center stop administration service company/business • Company start-ups: • Company start-ups: as of April 2015. Six registration service consultation languages partly introduced partly introduced available from 2011 available. Internet based company Internet based company (English / Chinese) registration service registration service

Equity market capitalizatio n (end-2014)

bonds outstanding (end-2014)

Banks’ assets (end2014)

Singapore • Corporation tax: 17% • Individual income tax: 20% (top rate) • VAT: 7%

• Income and other financial sector tax incentives introduced to attract overseas financial institutions. • Company start-ups: Internet-based one-stop administration service available since 1990s. (English)

$4.4 trillion (% of GDP: 95%)

$19.4 trillion (% of GDP: 112%)

$4.0 trillion (% of GDP: 134%)

$3.2 trillion (% of GDP: 1111%)

$0.8 trillion ($ of GDP: 245%)

$11.0 trillion (% of GDP: 240%)

$35.8 trillion (% of GDP: 206%)

$6.2 trillion (% of GDP: 206%)

$0.4 trillion (% of GDP: 122%)

$0.3 trillion (% of GDP: 114%)

$15.2 trillion (% of GDP: 330%)

$21.2 trillion (% of GDP: 122%)

$16.8 trillion (% of GDP: 561%)

$2.4 trillion ($ of GDP: 817%)

$1.8 trillion (% of GDP: 582%)

Source: DIR (based on World Federation of Exchanges, Bank for international Settlements, JETRO, and Haver Analytics data) Copyright © 2016 Daiwa Institute of Research Ltd. All rights reserved.

5

Comparison between Tokyo, New York, London, Hong Kong and Singapore as Global Financial Centers ② GDP of Countries by Sector (2014)

100% 4.4%

9.6% 7.9%

20.8%

7.1%

18.9%

16.6% 12.5% Agriculture, fisheries, mining

80%

Finance 60%

69.6% 79.1%

79.0%

71.6% 69.7%

40%

63.9% 72.2%

Services (excl. finance)

77.8%

Manufacturing 20% 5.5% Singapore

7.3%

Hong Kong

23.5%

London

9.2% UK, All

US, All

Japan, All

0%

20.3% New York

11.2%

15.8%

Tokyo

24.8%

Source: DIR (based on Tokyo Metropolitan Government, U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis, The Office for National Statics, Haver Analytics data) Copyright © 2016 Daiwa Institute of Research Ltd. All rights reserved.

6

Features and Problems of Tokyo’s Markets as a Financial Center Equity market

Bond market

Derivative market

 High liquidity a strength; highly visible foreign investor presence a key feature.  Very few foreign company listings compared with overseas markets.  PTS trading in doldrums; domestic inter-market competition limited.  HFT and algorithmic trading provide high levels of liquidity.

 Huge government bond issuance, 95% held by domestic Japanese investors.  Corporate bond issuance limited compared with US; issues for the most part by companies thought particularly creditworthy.  Corporate bonds held mostly by Japanese banks rather than foreign investors, thereby effectively limiting secondary market liquidity.

 Listed derivative trading smallscale by comparison with equity market.  Around 70% of investors foreign; domestic investors play only a very minor role.  Tendency for actively traded products to be equity indexoriented.  Commodity-related and financerelated markets separate.

Asset management business

Business, living environment, other considerations

 Japan the main center for Japanese share trading; Asian shares traded primarily in Hong Kong and Singapore. Following the financial crisis, however, Japanese share trading has also started to gravitate overseas.  There are also investment companies that the Japan office is positioned as a sales office.  Top-flight fund managers trading Japanese and/or Asian shares tend to move out of Japan.

 Corporation and income tax high compared with other cities (Hong Kong, Singapore).  English language business environment less favorable than other cities.  Foreigner-friendly life-style infrastructure (schools, maids, nannies, English-language medical services) lacking compared with other cities  Tokyo’s systems and infrastructure are domestic marketoriented and settlement infrastructure and the like are not in conformity with global specifications.

Source: Compiled by DIR (based on publications such as the Japan Securities Dealers’ Association “Report of the Council for Tokyo Global Financial Center Promotional Activities) Copyright © 2016 Daiwa Institute of Research Ltd. All rights reserved.

7

Derivative Markets – Largest Exchanges Largest Derivatives Exchange Rank

Futures and options volume traded and/or cleared.

Exchange

Country

Number of contracts (2014) in millions

1

CME Group

United States

3,443

2

Intercontinental Exchange

United States

2,276

3

Eurex

Germany

2,098

4

National Stock Exchange of India

India

1,880

5

BM&F Bovespa

Brazil

1,418

6

Moscow Exchange

Russia

1,413

7

CBOE Holdings

United States

1,325

8

Nasdaq OMX

United States

1,127

9

Shanghai Futures Exchange

China

842

10

Dalian Commodity Exchange

China

770

11

BSE

India

726

12

Korea Exchange

Korea

678

13

Zhengzhou Commodity Exchange

China

676

14

Hong Kong Exchanges & Clearing

Hong Kong

320

15

Japan Exchange

Japan

310

Japan

372

Tokyo total

Japan Exchange + Tokyo Financial Exchange + Tokyo Commodity Exchange

Source: Futures Industry Association Copyright © 2016 Daiwa Institute of Research Ltd. All rights reserved.

8

Mezzanine Finance – International Comparisons: Issuance Trends ($ Bil)

Japan

400

UK・France・Germany

US

300 33

200 105

100 112

0 2005

2006

2007

2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

2013

2014

2015 (Year)

Source: DIR (based on Bloomberg and Haver Analytics data) Note: SUM of CB and Subordinated Debt Issuance by country of issuance.

Copyright © 2016 Daiwa Institute of Research Ltd. All rights reserved.

9

ABS Markets – International Comparisons: Issuance Trends

Japan

US

MBS (Japan Housing Finance Agency)

($ Bil)

40

($ Bil)

2,500

MBS (Institutions other than the Japan Housing Finance Agency) Other securitized products

Europe

MBS (Agency securities)

($ Bil)

MBS (Other issuers)

1,400

MBS

Securitized products other than MBS

Other securitized products

1,200

2,000

30

1,000 1,500

800

1,000

600

20

400

(FY)

(Year)

2015

2014

2013

2012

2011

2010

2009

0

2008

2015

2014

2013

2012

2011

2010

2009

2008

0

200 2007

2014

2013

2012

2011

2010

2009

2008

2007

0

500

2007

10

(Year)

Source: DIR (based on JBA, SIFMA, and Haver Analytics data) Note: US agency bonds include CMO (collateralized mortgage obligations).

Copyright © 2016 Daiwa Institute of Research Ltd. All rights reserved.

10

Japan’s Corporate Competitiveness Gross Domestic expenditures on R&D

Return on Equity (ROE)

(%)

Nikkei 225 FTSE100

25 20

(% of GDP)

S&P500 DAX

5

CANADA ITALY US

4

15

JAPAN FRANCE CHINA

GERMANY UK

3

10 2

5

1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014

2015

2014

2013

2012

2012

2011

2010

2009

2008

2007

2006

2005

2004

0

2003

-5

2002

1 2001

0

(Year)

(No.)

15.0

1,200 Transaction value Number of transactions

12.5

0.0

0

(FY)

2015

200 2014

2.5 2013

400

2012

5.0

2011

600

2010

1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014

0

7.5

2009

Manufacturing All Industries(excluding financials) Non-Manufacturing

800

2008

20

1,000

10.0

2007

30

2006

40

10

Japan's Outbound M&A

(JPY tril)

2005

50

Capital Adequacy Ratio April-March Business-Term Listed Companies

2004

(%)

(Year)

(Year)

Source: DIR (based on Japan Exchange Group, IMF, Bloomberg) Note: Listed companies are composed of TSE 1st & 2nd sections, Mothers and JASDAQ (FY2014 only) markets. Copyright © 2016 Daiwa Institute of Research Ltd. All rights reserved.

11

Japan Revitalization Strategy (Growth Strategy) 2015 Principal measures Revolution in productivity by investment in the future Encouraging corporate behavior to improve “earning power” ・ Further enhancement of growth-oriented corporate governance ・ Promotion of innovation and venture business ・ International expansion to growing markets including Asia

Accelerating proactive actions to challenge a new era ・ ‟4th Industrial Revolution” caused by the development of IoT, Big data, A.I. ・ Full utilization of ITC, with reinforcement of cyber security measures

Developing personal capabilities and knowledge ・ Improvement of labor quality through addressing long-working hours practices, further promotion of women, elderly persons etc. ・ Development of capabilities of human resources in the era of great transformation of the society

Promotion of Local Abenomics Enhance “earning power” of mid-ranking companies, SMEs and micro enterprises Vitalize services industry and enhance its productivity Transform primary industry/ health care industry/ tourism into key industries Implementation of leading projects for 2020

Automatic travelling vehicles, hydrogen society, advanced robots, tourism, FDI etc. Source: DIR (based on Cabinet secretariat)

Copyright © 2016 Daiwa Institute of Research Ltd. All rights reserved.

12

Mezzanine Investor Presence of Public-Private Investment Funds Specific areas

Japan Oil, Gas and Metals National Corporation



[industrial investment finance]



Japan Overseas Infrastructure Investment Corporation for Transport & Urban Development

PFI Promotion Corporation of Japan [industrial investment finance]

[industrial investment finance]



Shoko Chukin Bank [industrial investment finance]

JBIC Overseas Development Aid Investment Facility

Amount of funds and loans (As of end Sept 2015) Public:642.4 bil yen Private:54.3 bil yen Government-guaranteed: 3,216.4 bil yen

[industrial investment finance]

Japan Finance Corporation

Cool Japan Fund

(subordinated loan) [industrial investment finance]

[industrial investment finance]

Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries Fund Corporation for Innovation, Value-chain and Expansion Japan

<6th level industrializaion>

[industrial investment finance and loans]

Company size

DBJ

(small and medium)

Private sector financial institutions

Early

General areas

Small

Japan Finance Corporation

Senior loans

DBJ Competition Promotion Fund [industrial investment loans]

Japan Finance Corporation (subordinated capital loans) [industrial investment finance and loans]

The Innovation Network Corporation of Japan [industrial investment finance] Venture

Mezzanine (subordinated loans, preferred shares)

Source: Ministry of Finance Japan

Copyright © 2016 Daiwa Institute of Research Ltd. All rights reserved.

Early

Equity Large (ordinary shares) Financial method risk

13

Current Situation for RMB Business and Offshore Bonds

Monthly RMB turnover in the Tokyo and London Forex markets ($ Bil )

(RMB Bil )

1,000

700

900

864.0

584.9

600

Oct-2014

800 700

Offshore RMB debt security outstanding by country

Apr-2015

500

798.1

600

400

500 400

Share 1.3 %

300

Share 1.7 %

200

300 200

Share 0.08 %

Share 0.16%

100

50.0

100 7.2

12.3

0 London market ($-RMB)

Tokyo market (JPY-RMB)

23.5

21.7

UK 2015/9

Germany 2015/3

0 Hong Kong Singapore 2015/6 2015/3

0.7

Japan 2015/6

Source: DIR (based on Tokyo Foreign Exchange Market Committee, Hong Kong Monetary Authority, Foreign Exchange Joint Standing Committee, Monetary Authority of Singapore, London Stock Exchange, Deutsche Bundesbank data) Note: ‟Share” is the percentage of each market’s forex business accounted for by the RMB. Copyright © 2016 Daiwa Institute of Research Ltd. All rights reserved.

14

What is the “Japan Global Asset Management Center”? Tokyo’s Kabuto-cho will be redefined as a global asset management center boasting state of the art connectivity and infrastructure, necessary in todays modern markets

Location

• Situated between the Tokyo Stock Exchange, the Japan Securities Clearing Corporation and the Japan Securities Dealers Association • Walking distance to Tokyo metropolitan railway terminal the central business district

Photos courtesy of Japan Exchange Group, Inc.

• Finance professionals and IT service providers

Community • The historical heart of the financial district

Milestones

• 2016~ : Satellite office space for funds & start-ups established • 2016~ : Incentive programs initiated (tbc) • 2017~ : Introductory office & business suite services offered • 2018~ : Special incentive scheme, first phase executed (tbc) • 2020~ : JGAM center launched

Source: Heiwa Real Estate mid-term plan and PwC Analysis Japan Global Asset Management Center (JGAM) - a special economic zone in Kabuto-cho, Tokyo

Copyright © 2016 Daiwa Institute of Research Ltd. All rights reserved.

15

Tokyo Financial Street

Otemachi Area

Bank of Japan

Daiwa Securities

Nihombashi Area

Kabutcho Area

Merrill Lynch

Japan Securities Depository Center

Nomura Securities

-1-

Japan Securities Copyright © 2016 Daiwa Institute of Research Ltd. All rights reserved. Dealers Association

Tokyo Stock Exchange

16

Overview of the JGAM

Illustrative

Services aligned to your business allow you to focus on what matters; implementation of key components of your value chain are our top priority Investors

JGAM Asset Managers

Commercial Bank

HF PE Real Estate

Insurance Pension / Endowment Sovereign Wealth Fund Family Office High Net Worth / Wealth Managers Mass Retail Investors

Prime Broker

Fund Admin/ Transfer Agent JGAM’s Launch Pad

1

One-Stop Professional Services for Licensing

2

Business Matchmaking

3

Corporate Functions

4

Offices & Conference Rooms

5

ICT Platform

Governmental Agencies

Regulators

Custodian

Business Servicer

IT System Vendor

Japan Global Asset Management Center (JGAM) - a special economic zone in Kabuto-cho, Tokyo

Copyright © 2016 Daiwa Institute of Research Ltd. All rights reserved.

17

Market Entry- Challenge and Response

Not Exhaustive

Challenges to entering the Japanese market exist. Government agencies and private sector service providers provide solutions to these challenges Perceived Challenge

Reality

1 One-Stop Professional Services for Licensing

• Expensive professional services (e.g., legal, tax, translation) • Monopoly of back office systems and custody service providers • High rent (office and residential) • High labor cost • High tax rate

• Rent cost cheaper compared to other financial centers • Contenders exist at varying degrees of coverage for back office systems and custodian services

• Concierge service (e.g., housing, visa, office setup) • Reasonable office rent (c. $50 per sqm per month) • Subsidies for business operations

Language

• Insufficient English language environment • Most regulatory documentation in Japanese

• Most understand English (English education starts at age of 7) • English largely accepted by government agencies

• Professional interpreters and translators (available 24/7)

Regulation

• Registration and licensing • Stringent regulatory inspection process • Complex regulatory and reporting obligations

• Straight-forward registration process • Clear interpretations of Japanese regulations available • Global standardization of regulations promoted

• Advice on regulatory compliance  Registration support  Regulatory advisory  Regulatory reporting automation engine

Cost of Doing Business and Living in Japan

Source: Interviews with Japan based foreign asset managers, Japan Financial Services Agency and PwC Analysis Japan Global Asset Management Center (JGAM) - a special economic zone in Kabuto-cho, Tokyo

Copyright © 2016 Daiwa Institute of Research Ltd. All rights reserved.

18

Business ImplementationBenefits of being in the JGAM

Not Exhaustive

JGAM will provide promising growth opportunities and risk control Type of Benefit

Examples of JGAM’s benefits

2 Business

Matchmaki ng

Functions

− Outsourcing of operations and/or compliance and other corporate functions to service providers − Sharing of insights & tools for legal, compliance, regulatory matters (e.g., templates / guidelines)

Offices & Conference Rooms

− Complimentary use of temporary office & conference rooms − Organization & coordination of meetings and events by dedicated staff − Low cost media broadcast facilities for investors relation

ICT Platform

− − − − − −

3 Corporate 4

5

− Business matchmaking & networking  Physical site (conference rooms)  Sponsored events  Online services (e.g., search engine / secure & compliant chat system)  Japanese governmental agency programs

State-of-the-art front office systems (e.g., OMS / EMS) and secured dealing Analytical tools & reports for decision making Compliant low cost middle / back office systems Co-location and connectivity with major system and market data vendors Regulatory compliant data center Back-up center for business continuity

Cost Business Risk Productiv Growth Control ity



-

-

-



-

✓ ✓ -

✓ ✓ ✓ ✓ ✓ -

✓ ✓ ✓

Japan Global Asset Management Center (JGAM) - a special economic zone in Kabuto-cho, Tokyo

Copyright © 2016 Daiwa Institute of Research Ltd. All rights reserved.

19

THANK YOU VERY MUCH FOR YOUR ATTENTION